Nobel lecture (2006) by Ferit Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish author made interesting reading.
''...So my father was not the only one: we all give too much importance to the idea of a world with a centre. Whereas the impulse that compels us to shut ourselves up in our rooms to write for years on end is a faith in the opposite, the belief that one day our writings will be read and understood, because people the world over resemble one another. This, as I know from my own and my father’s writing, is a troubled optimism, scarred by the anger of being consigned to the margins...
... The writer’s secret is not inspiration—for it is never clear where that comes from—but stubbornness, endurance. The lovely Turkish expression “to dig a well with a needle” seems to me to have been invented with writers in mind...''
Click here to read the lecture in full.
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